1R 7521'+(,0678',(6 21($67(8523($1&8/785(6 62&,(7,(6 0$5,$)5,76&+( ),(5<+81*$5,$1668%9(56,9(&=(&+661$33< *(50$16 7+(5(&<&/,1*2)+,6725<,13267:$5 $8675,$1&,1(0$ -XO\ Maria Fritshe is Research Fellow at the University of Southampton. Dr. Fritsche studied History, Political Science, Film Studies and Gender Studies at the Universities in Vienna, Bern and Portsmouth and has worked as a researcher and lecturer. Her main research interests lie in the field of film history as well as 20th century social, military and gender history, particularly in Europe during World War II and the postwar era. Her current research project deals with the Marshall Plan Information Campaign and the planning, production and reception of Marshall Plan propaganda films in the 1950s. © 2010 Maria Fritsche and the Program on East European Cultures and Societies, a program of the Faculties of Humanities and Social Sciences, Norwegian University of Science and Technology. ISSN 1501-6684 Trondheim Studies on East European Cultures and Societies Editors: György Péteri and Sabrina P. Ramet Editorial Board: Trond Berge, Tanja Ellingsen, Knut Andreas Grimstad, Arne Halvorsen We encourage submissions to the Trondheim Studies on East European Cultures and Societies. Inclusion in the series will be based on anonymous review. Manuscripts are expected to be in English and not to exceed 150 double spaced pages in length. Postal address for submissions: Editor, Trondheim Studies on East European Cultures and Societies, Department of History, NTNU, NO-7491 Trondheim, Norway. For more information on PEECS and TSEECS, visit our web-site at http://www.hf.ntnu.no/peecs/home/ Illustration on cover: Kaiser Wilhelm (Wolfgang Lukschy) and Kaiser Franz Joseph (Paul Hörbiger) in Die Deutschmeister (1955). Maria Fritsche Fiery Hungarians. Subversive Czechs. Snappy Germans. The Recycling of History in Post-war Austrian Cinema (1945–1955)1 Historical Costume Film as Historiographical Source Sissi (1955), the tragic story of the Bavarian princess Elisabeth/Sissi, who falls in love with the young Austrian emperor Franz Joseph I. and marries him, still tops the league of the most successful productions in post-war Austria.2 It is a classic that has acquired a cult following across continental Europe. While Sissi is one of the few Austrian films known outside German-speaking countries today, it was certainly not the only profitable historical costume film within Austria at the time. In fact, the historical costume film was undeniably one of the most popular domestic genres at the time. But why was the genre so successful? Was it because it offered an escape to a fairytale world through its glamorised Imperial setting and splendid costumes? Was it because it romanticised the past and thereby conveyed a sense of permanence and stability? Historical costume films, defined as films set in the historical past but not necessarily dealing with actual historical events or personae, did not merely feed escapist desires.3 No other genre in post-war Austrian cinema celebrated Austria and the Austrian people more strongly than the historical costume film. My argument is that the domestic historical costume film, apart from providing escapism and reassurance, played a major role in the construction of Austrian national identity. It helped to instil a sense of national pride and it popularised the idea that Austria was a nation distinct from Germany – a conviction that was 1 I would like to thank Christian Cargnelli for his helpful and critical comments to this article and György Péteri for his encouragement to publish the article in this series. All translations from German are my own. The pictures are screenshots from the films, unless otherwise stated. 2 See e.g. S. Hake. (2002). German National Cinema. London, New York: Routledge, 114. E. Marischka. (Director). (1955). Sissi [Motion Picture]. Austria: Erma-Film. 3 Critics use the terms ‘historical’ and ‘costume’ or ‘heritage’ often interchangeably to categorise films that are set in what the audience perceives as historical past. The term costume film, as for example Sue Harper has used it, is more open than ‘historical film’ which is usually used to define films that are set in the past and deal with real historical personae or events. See S. Harper. (1994). Picturing the Past. The Rise and Fall of the British Costume Film. London: BFI, 2. For a discussion of the terms costume, historical and heritage film see for example A. Higson. (2003). English Heritage, English Cinema. Costume Drama since 1980. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 9–11. 1 by no means shared by all Austrians after the Second World War.4 The films fed into the discourse on Austrian identity, equipping it with adequate imagery and providing ‘historical evidence’ for the claim that the Austrians were a distinct species. Historical costume films shape notions of national identity.5 They do not represent the past truthfully, but interpret it, making it both ‘usable’ and accessible for the present. Pierre Sorlin suggested that historical costume films constitute the ‘historical capital’ of a society by producing ‘myths’ about the past.6 The ruling elites may instrumentalise these ‘myths’ to sustain their power. This, however, does not necessarily mean that historical films are always in line with the dominant discourse or serve as vehicle for the dissemination of national ideologies.7 They can also act subversively, as they provide an ideal forum in which displeasure can be aired.8 Sometimes critique can be expressed more easily when cloaked in historical costume and placed in a bygone era. Anybody studying film history is faced with the challenge of explaining the complex relationship between historical change and cultural texts. While we are not able to verify exactly how and to what extent cultural texts such as films respond to historical change, we can assume that films tell us something about the time in which they were made. As films are produced and consumed by people who are rooted in society, they draw their images and themes from that social environment.9 Hence, even though films do not reflect social reality, they engage with it and can thus, according to Justin Smith, be considered ‘the repository of currents of feeling’ of a society.10 The analysis of films can therefore give valuable insights into the collective hopes and anxieties of a society, making film an indispensible source for historical investigation.11 4 See E. Hanisch. (1994). Der lange Schatten des Staates. Österreichische Gesellschaftsgeschichte im 20. Jahrhundert. Wien: Ueberreuter, 159–163. 5 See B. De Wever. (2007). Prologue: Historical Film as Palimpsest. In L. Engelen & R. V. Winkel (Eds.), Perspectives on European Film and History (5–11). Gent: Academia Press, 8. 6 P. Sorlin, (1980). Film in History. Restaging the Past. Oxford: Blackwell, 21. 7 This would explain why, for example, all state-commissioned films in the Third Reich were historical films. See Hake, 2002, 77–78. 8 See F. Stern. (2005). Durch Clios Brille: Kino als zeit/und kulturgeschichtliche Herausforderung. Österreichische Zeitschrift für Geschichtswissenschaften, 16 (1), 59–87, 74. 9 See R. C. Allen & D. Gomery. (1985). Film History. Theory and Practice New York, London: McGraw-Hill, 158. 10 J. Smith. (2008). Film History [Electronic version]. In Making History: The Discipline in Perspective. London: Institute of Historical Research. URL: http://www.history.ac.uk/makinghistory/resources/articles/film_history.html, retrieved 6 February 2010. 11 See A. Kaes. (1995). German Cultural History and the Study of Film: Ten Theses and a Postscript. New German Critique (65), 47–58, 51. 2 While film always engages with the environment it is produced in, it is more responsive to social changes in some periods than in others. Tim Bergfelder’s argument that popular cultural often gives more emphasis to the national when countries ‘feel beleaguered in their political or cultural identity’ is certainly true for Austria after the Second World War.12 Post-war Austrian cinema provides a particularly interesting case study to analyse cinematic discourses and the role of cinema in society, because the decade after the Second World War was a most momentous period in Austrian history: In 1945 Austria was a defeated country whose economy and social structures had suffered severe damages. Large parts of the cities and the industry had been destroyed, a considerable percentage of men was absent due to casualties and imprisonment, and the country was occupied by the former enemies. Faced with military defeat, the difficult legacy of Nazi dictatorship, the loss of loved ones, and the destruction of their homes or privates lives, many Austrians felt disoriented and hopeless.13 Some issues, such as those of gender and national identity, were particularly pressing at the time. Gender relations had come under severe pressure, because the return of veterans triggered conflicts between men and women over the distribution of power and the question of gender roles.14 Moreover, the downfall of the German Reich had made national identity once more an issue of vital importance. As a union with Germany was no longer desired or opportune, Austria’s elites put much effort into promoting the idea of an independent Austrian nation; this was as much directed at the Austrian people to strengthen their sense of national identity as at the occupying Allied Forces, who should be coaxed into granting Austria national independence.15 Austrian cinema did not just comment on these issues but actively engaged in the discourses on national identity and gender roles. By analysing how cinema debated these issues I hope to identify the emotional currents that ran through post-war Austrian society; I 12 T. Bergfelder. (2005). National, Transnational or Supranational cinema? Rethinking European Film Studies. Media, Culture & Society, 27 (3), 315–331, 319.
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